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After His Ex Called My Daughter “Her Baby” Novel Cover

After His Ex Called My Daughter “Her Baby”

I noticed her hands first. She was unpacking the dishwasher when I came downstairs that first morning — moving through our kitchen like she'd done it a hundred times. Reached for the cabinet above the coffee maker without looking. Stacked the mugs in the right order, handles facing out, the way I'd arranged them years ago. I stood in the doorway in my robe and watched her do it, and I thought: Darren must have given her a tour. I told myself that. Her name was Lyla. That was all Darren gave me — Lyla, referred by a colleague, available immediately, great with kids. He'd hired her without asking me, which I didn't love, but July had been going through a clingy phase and I was pulling double shifts at the bakery before the holiday rush. I let it go.
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Chapter 2

Lylah figured it out fast.

I don't know exactly when she decided that my restraint was an invitation, but I watched it happen in real time — the way a person tests a fence, pressing lightly at first, then harder once they realize it won't push back.

It started with July's hair.

Every morning that week, Lylah was up before me. By the time I came downstairs, July was already at the kitchen table, sitting very still while Lylah worked a brush through her hair. French braids. Neat, tight, the kind that take patience and practice. The kind I'd been doing for four years.

I stood in the doorway and watched Lylah's hands move through my daughter's hair, and I poured myself a cup of coffee, and I said nothing.

The lunches came next. I'd always packed July's lunch — turkey and cheese cut into triangles, apple slices, a small note tucked under the sandwich. Nothing elaborate. Just a thing I did. One Tuesday I opened July's bag to add her water bottle and found a note already inside, written in handwriting I didn't recognize. A little heart drawn in the corner.

I put the note back. I added the water bottle. I zipped the bag.

Then there was the language. Lylah started calling her "my baby" — not when Darren was out of the room, but specifically when he was in it, and specifically when I was too. Casual. Soft. Like it was just a thing she said.

July heard it. Of course she did. Kids hear everything.

That Thursday night, I was sitting on the edge of July's bed doing our usual routine — lights low, rabbit tucked in, the same three pages of the same book we'd read approximately four hundred times. July was quiet in a way that wasn't sleepy. She was thinking.

"Mama," she said.

"Yeah, bug."

She picked at a loose thread on her blanket. "Is she my other mommy?"

I kept my face still. "What makes you ask that?"

"She said 'my baby.'" July looked up at me. "She said it like you say it."

My chest did something complicated. I set the book down.

"Does that mean," July said carefully, "that you're going away?"

I pulled her in close. She smelled like the lavender shampoo I'd been buying since she was two. I pressed my lips to the top of her head and I held her, and I said, "I'm not going anywhere."

I meant it more fiercely than I have ever meant anything in my life.

She was quiet for a moment. Then: "Okay." Like she'd decided to believe me. Like she was choosing it.

I sat with her until she fell asleep. Then I went downstairs and opened my notebook and wrote: *She is performing this for an audience. The audience is July.*

---

The apartment turned up on a Wednesday.

Nora had asked me to pull together three months of shared account statements — utilities, subscriptions, anything recurring. I was in the bakery's back office after close, laptop open, going line by line. It was the kind of task that required just enough focus to keep the rest of my brain quiet, which was probably why I'd been putting it off.

I almost missed it. A lease payment, auto-drafted on the first of every month. An address in Belltown I didn't recognize.

I sat with it for a minute. Then I typed the address into my phone.

I drove there after I locked up. It was a Thursday-night kind of street — a few restaurants still lit, a couple walking a dog, the particular Seattle drizzle that isn't quite rain. The building was the kind of place that had probably been nice fifteen years ago. Four stories, brick, a small awning over the entrance. The kind of place a young couple might have shared.

I parked across the street and sat in my car with the engine off.

I didn't go in. I didn't need to. I just needed to see it — to make it real, to let it sit in my body the way the truth has to sit before you can do anything useful with it.

I thought about Darren telling me, the night we got engaged, that he'd sold his old place and was ready to start fresh. I had believed him. I had been so ready to believe him.

After a while I drove home. I went upstairs without turning on the lights. I opened my notebook and wrote down the address and the monthly amount and the number of months I could document.

I didn't say anything to Darren.

The list was now four pages.

---

Marcus called on a Friday afternoon.

I was in the middle of a double batch of sourdough and almost didn't pick up. I'm glad I did, and I'm not glad I did, and I'm still not sure which feeling is bigger.

"Ember." His voice had that particular quality — the one people get when they've been rehearsing something and are still not sure they can say it. "I need to tell you something. I should have told you a long time ago."

I set down the bench scraper. "Okay."

A pause. "July's name. Darren chose it. He — July was the month he and Lylah first got together. He told me when she was born. He thought it was — I don't know what he thought. I should have said something. I didn't."

The kitchen was very quiet. Outside, a bus went past.

"I know," Marcus said, "that this doesn't help. I just thought you should know it. All of it."

"Thank you," I said. "I mean that."

I hung up. I stood at the counter with my hands still dusted with flour and I looked at the wall and I thought about a man who named his daughter after the month he fell in love with someone else. Who kept an apartment he told me he'd given up. Who installed that woman in our home and handed her a key and let her braid our daughter's hair.

I thought about July asking me if I was going away.

My hands were shaking. I waited until they stopped. It took a while.

Then I washed them, dried them, and went to the back office. I opened my notebook to the next blank line and I wrote: *July. The month. He knew the whole time.*

Four pages.

I closed the notebook. I went back to the sourdough. I had an early morning and a full case to build, and I was not going to stop now.

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